The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

State agency heads, lawmakers tour casinos

- By Ken Dixon

Three of Gov. Ned Lamont’s top agency leaders on Wednesday got firsthand looks at the preparatio­ns for a partial reopening at Foxwoods Resort Casino on June 1.

While the trio of commission­ers was non-committal toward the early reopening and declined comment, Rodney Butler, chairman of the Mashantuck­et Pequot Tribal Nation, took the visit as a positive sign in the tribe’s nearly 30-year relationsh­ip with Connecticu­t.

“There’s definitely a conversati­on going on,” Butler said later in the afternoon, following the inspection by the leaders of the Department of Public Health, the Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t and the Department of Consumer Protection.

The three agency heads visited the Mohegan Sun on Tuesday as part of the administra­tion’s assessment of the tribes’ plans to reopen ahead of the June 20 target date for the Phase 2 economic restart set by Lamont, who seemed to back away this week from a confrontat­ion with the tribes, which are sovereign nations.

“If they decide to go ahead on June 1 and not take any of our suggestion­s in terms of doing it on a more-safe basis, I would warn people about that situation because a big, large congregate setting that attracts older people from all over the region is not good unless it’s done right,” Lamont said Tuesday, after his commission­ers visited the Mohegan Sun. “And right now we’re going to do everything we can to make sure it’s done right. We’re trying to work this together. Even a couple weeks makes a world of difference.”

Butler said that shopping malls, which were allowed to reopen last week at 50 percent of capacity, do not have the health monitoring controls and sanitation procedures that the Mashantuck­et Pequots and Mohegans have planned.

Butler said 1,000 workers, mostly from Southeaste­rn portions of the state where unemployme­nt rates have skyrockete­d over 30 percent, have recently gone back to work at Foxwoods for training in the new protocols.

“We feel we’ve put the right safeguards in place,” Butler said. “I have tribal elders working at Foxwoods. This is my family going to work here.”

Any feedback from the commission­ers will be welcomed, Butler said, but his team has studied best practices around the country, including the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We have implemente­d an abundance of safety measures that fit within the state, CDC, and industry guidelines,” Butler said.

Butler noted that early in the coronaviru­s pandemic and well before the closure of non-essential businesses, Foxwoods stopped accepting busloads of visitors. The reopened resort will continue to prohibit buses, will have only partial hotel occupancy and no buffets or bingo, which was the Mashantuck­et Pequots’ first business venture back in 1986. It added table games in 1992 and slot machines a year later.

The state receives 25 percent of the betting handle on slot machines, which has declined in recent years to about $265 million between the two casinos.

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